Scriabin: Piano Sonatas Varduhi Yeritsyan

Cover Scriabin: Piano Sonatas

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
16.09.2015

Label: Paraty Productions

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Varduhi Yeritsyan

Composer: Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Sonata No. 1, Op. 70: Moderato 12:30
  • 2 Sonata No. 4 in F Sharp Majeur, Op. 30: I. Andante 02:43
  • 3 Sonata No. 4 in F Sharp Majeur, Op. 30: II. Prestissimo volando 05:04
  • 4 Sonata No. 6, Op. 62: Modéré 11:53
  • 5 I. Dramatico 05:48
  • 6 II. Allegretto 02:28
  • 7 III. Andante 04:08
  • 8 IV. Presto con fuoco 06:14
  • 9 Sonata No. 7, Op. 64 White Mass: Allegro 11:42
  • 10 Sonata No. 8, Op. 66: Lento 13:13
  • 11 Sonata No. 9, Op. 68 Black Mass: Moderato quasi Andante 08:17
  • 12 I. Allegro con fuoco 07:31
  • 13 II. 04:50
  • 14 III. Presto 03:41
  • 15 IV. Funebre 05:28
  • 16 Sonata No. 2 in G Sharp Minor, Op. 19 Sonata Fantasy: I. Andante 07:23
  • 17 Sonata No. 2 in G Sharp Minor, Op. 19 Sonata Fantasy: II. Presto 04:13
  • 18 Sonata No. 5 in F Sharp Majeur, Op. 53: Allegro Impetuoso Con stravaganza 11:18
  • Total Runtime 02:08:24

Info for Scriabin: Piano Sonatas

A fellow student of Rachmaninov’s at the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied under Arensky and Taneyev, Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915) occupies a unique sphere in Russian music. Rejecting the vocal and folkloristic music that occupied most of his contemporaries, he wrote exclusively for piano and for orchestra. His musical language constantly evolved over the length of his life, passing from the early influence of Chopin and Liszt, through a Wagnerian period, before reaching an atonal style that gazes far into the future of the 20th century’s sound world.

Known for her interpretations of Scriabin's music, which she plays often in recital, Franco-Armenian pianist Varduhi Yeritsyan studied with both Brigitte Engerer and Pierre-Laurent Aimard. She made her UK debut with the BBC Symphony Orchestra in February 2014 at the Barbican where she premiered a new concerto for two pianos, by Bruno Mantovani, written for her and François-Frédéric Guy.

'Varduhi Yeritsyan, an interpreter inhabited by the spirit of crazy genius of Scriabin

„The ten sonatas were given in two evenings by the young Varduhi Yeritsyan, a pianist of an incredible talent [...] The Sonata n 7, 'White Mass' was a highlight of the evening...' (Michèle Tosi, ResMusica)

Varduhi Yeritsyan, piano


Varduhi Yeritsyan
Born in Armenia on Labour Day and living in France since the age of 20, Varduhi Yeritsyan holds an uncommon place in the current pianistic landscape. Through her twin cultures inherited by great masters such as Brigitte Engerer, Vladimir Krainev, Msitslav Rostropovich, Denis Pascal and Claire Désert, she is both a specialist in the Russian repertoire and a regular interpreter of the French repertoire. After graduating from Yerevan’s Tchaikovsky Specialised Music School for gifted children under Professor Vili Sargsyan, she studied at the Paris Conservatory (CNSMDP), where she obtained the highest prizes for piano and chamber music. She then completed a postgraduate cycle in both areas, studying with, respectively, Brigitte Engerer – her true mentor ever since her arrival in France – and cellist Marc Coppey.

In 2007, Varduhi Yeritsyan won the Paris Conservatoiry’s Avant-Scènes annual student contest. She has also won accolades from the Natixis-Banque populaire, Tarrazi, Nadia et Lili Boulanger, Meyer and Or du Rhin Foundations, and was named “Classical Music Revelation” by ADAMI, a French performers’-rights collective.

Since completing her studies with a performance of Aram Khachaturian’s Concerto at the Cité de la musique, she has been invited to multiple festivals (Folle Journée de Nantes, Festival de la Roque d’Anthéron, Piano aux Jacobins de Toulouse, Festival Berlioz de La Côte Saint André, Pianofolies de Touquet, Piano en Valois, Festival de Saint Lizier, Piano(s) à Lille, Les solistes aux Serres d’Auteuil, Festival international de violoncelle de Beauvais, Festival de Sully sur Loire, Festival Messiaen de la Meije) and has played on many French and international stages, including Paris’s Louvre Auditorium, the Cité de la musique and the Salle Pleyel, the Arsenal in Metz, Toulouse’s Halle aux Grains, Porto’s Casa da Musica, the Concertgebouw Amsterdam, the Hague Theatre, the Czech Philharmonic in Prague, the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki, the Estonia theatre in Tallin...

Renowned for her interpretation of Alexander Scriabin, whose cycle of ten sonatas for piano she regularly plays as a cycle, she is also a passionate chamber musician, sharing the stage with Brigitte Engerer, the Danel, Psophos, Zemlinsky and Ardeo string quartets, violinists Renaud Capuçon, Fanny Clamagirand, Hae Sun Kang, Geneviève Laurenceau and Jean-Marc Phillips-Varjabédian, cellist Marc Coppey, bassoonist Pascal Gallois, pianist François-Frédéric Guy, jazz pianist Tigran Hamasyan and duduk player Araik Bartikian. She also particularly enjoys performing as soloist, and in recent years has played with conductors including Alain Altinoglu, Alexander Anissimov, Fabien Gabel, Claire Gibault, Christoph Koenig, Bruno Mantovani, Tugan Sokhiev and Zahia Ziouani, leading orchestras such as the Bretagne, Île-de-France and BBC London orchestras, that of Porto’s Casa da Musica, the Shanghai Philharmonic, the Strasbourg Philharmonic and the Toulouse Capitole Orchestra...

In 2010, she received funding from the prestigious Jean-Luc Lagardère foundation for her recording of Sergei Prokofiev’s music, released by Maestria Records in 2012. Varduhi Yeritsyan has been a guest on many shows on Radio France’s “France Musique” channel, including Gaëlle le Gallic’s “Dans la cour des grands”, Arièle Butaux’s “Un mardi ideal” and Jean-Pierre Derrien’s “Le matin des musiciens”.

She is an assistance professor of Denis Pascal’s piano class at the Paris Conservatory.

Booklet for Scriabin: Piano Sonatas

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